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GOP Anti-Poverty Spending: Up, Up and Away
HUMAN EVENTS ^ | Jul 20, 2006 | Deroy Murdock

Posted on 07/23/2006 2:30:27 PM PDT by neverdem

NEW YORK -- Everybody knows that President Bush and the Republican Congress have chopped poverty spending to finance massive tax cuts for their wealthy friends.

“The Republican House just voted to slash health care for struggling families, cut college loans for middle-class kids, and take food off the tables of poor children,” the American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees complained in TV ads during budget votes last December. As Rep. Charles Rangel (D.- N.Y.) moaned in the Washington Post, “I don’t know what the poor, the elderly, the disabled, or our foster children have done to Republicans to deserve this.”

Once again, what “everybody knows” turns out to be false.

Heritage Foundation budget analyst Brian Riedl actually looked at social spending under Republican control. What he finds is as astonishing as it is counterintuitive: Under the mean, nasty, coldhearted Republicans, expenditures on the poor have zoomed to record levels. In 2004, 16.3 percent of the federal budget went to anti-poverty efforts. This figure never has been higher.

In 2001, President Bush and the GOP Congress spent $285.7 billion on 33 anti-poverty programs. By 2005, that sum had grown $111.2 billion to a total of $396.9 billion. That 39 percent boost far outstripped that period’s 10 percent cumulative inflation. Republican poverty spending soared at nearly quadruple the inflation rate, yet liberals concocted bumper stickers at the last election that read: “Bush ’04 -- Eat the Poor.”

Among the 33 distinct programs Riedl analyzed, two were eliminated (the Food Donations Program and Low Rent Public Housing Loans and Expenses). Seven others were reduced. The other 24 all increased. And how! Refugee & Entrant Assistance: Up 11 percent between 2001 and 2005. Homeless Assistance Grants: Up 33 percent. Food Stamps: Up 71 percent. Child Tax Credit Payments (from $982 million to $14.6 billion): Up 1,389 percent.

In order to leave no category behind, all four major areas of public relief have burgeoned. Between 2001 and 2005, Bush and the GOP Congress boosted housing aid by 26 percent, cash assistance by 37 percent, health care spending by 40 percent, and food support by 49 percent.

“The myth that antipoverty spending is being slashed also matters,” Riedl writes. “In an era of massive, unsustainable spending increases and budget deficits, this erroneous consensus has effectively taken one-fifth of the non-interest federal budget off the table. In fact, anything less than the baseline growth of as much as 8 percent per year is now considered by many to be unconscionable.”

Is this GOP geyser of anti-poverty money diluting, if not drowning, President Clinton’s welfare reform?

“The Contract Congress of 1995-96 passed welfare reform and put the country on the high road toward far less dependence on government,” says Heritage scholar Bill Beach. “Since then, the growth of dependency-creating programs (from irresponsible expansions of health care to an explosion of agricultural and education subsidies) has forced Americans back on the low road of withering dependence and an expanding socialist management of private life.”

That is quite an indictment against America’s supposedly anti-government, pro-business party. While these figures rightfully should horrify free marketeers, they also ought to shield the GOP from the musty clichés about their lobbing poor folk onto the ice-encrusted railroad tracks -- just for laughs.

Republicans should refute the charge that they are trying to make America safe for Ebenezer Scrooge. At the same time, however, they should explain that there is a better way to help the poor than simply hosing them down with money. The GOP’s agenda should be to limit taxes and regulations that hinder entrepreneurship among the poor. Cutting taxes on business and personal income will increase growth, opportunity, employment, and wages.

To the degree government attempts to battle poverty, its expenditures should be targeted to the truly needy, not affluent seniors; disbursed as much as possible directly to beneficiaries, rather than to case workers and bureaucrats; and supervised in recipients’ cities and states, and less so by omniscient Washington functionaries.

Any Republican worth his elephant-emblazoned necktie should be able to make these arguments.

So, when Democrats bellyache about the cruel, stingy Republicans who abandoned the poor (while showering them with $111.2 billion in brand-new social spending), please try to contain your laughter.


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Culture/Society; Editorial; Government; News/Current Events; Politics/Elections; US: District of Columbia
KEYWORDS: entitlements; gop; govwatch; pubbies; welfare
I liked the The Washington Times' title better: Anti-poverty vapors
1 posted on 07/23/2006 2:30:28 PM PDT by neverdem
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To: neverdem

Sad but true bump.


2 posted on 07/23/2006 2:33:54 PM PDT by KantianBurke (We Cannot Civilize, But We Can Neutralize)
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To: neverdem

The GOP’s agenda should be to limit taxes and regulations that hinder entrepreneurship among the poor. Cutting taxes on business and personal income will increase growth, opportunity, employment, and wages.

yep..................

Also, the Earned Income Credit replaced a lot of welfare programs and grew. If you are an optimist this is good as now all the welfare is now in one program.....but


3 posted on 07/23/2006 2:56:31 PM PDT by PeterPrinciple (Seeking the truth here folks.)
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To: All

I believe the President is a good man. The Dems are wrong. I also believe inflation is much higher than the official CPI number, and the GDP is much lower. Under Clinton (& Greenspan) many govt statistics were changed. If the US is to right itself financially, spending has to be drastically cut. SS and Medicare need to be addressed, and this President was courageous enough to suggest changes. All of this new spending will only make the needed entitlement changes more difficult.


4 posted on 07/23/2006 3:05:57 PM PDT by PghBaldy (I'm sick of the media leaks & lies. God Bless America.)
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To: PghBaldy

The other major problem is that more and more Americans pay NO income taxes, and therfore feel no financial pain when spending and/or taxes are increased. There is something fundamentally wrong & unfair with a society in which one half the citizens pay for entitlements for the other half.


5 posted on 07/23/2006 3:12:01 PM PDT by PghBaldy (I'm sick of the media leaks & lies. God Bless America.)
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To: neverdem
IMHO I think it is great the Republicans are trying to teach the poor how to fish.

The have given the poor fish for a day.

The claimed that they championed the poor and at the same time the rats kept the poor dependent upon them and gave a heck of a tap dance during all the lip service.


have had decades to help the poor and what have they delivered?

Seems to me that the has delivered more then the have.
6 posted on 07/23/2006 4:06:35 PM PDT by do the dhue (I hope y'all will help bail me out of jail after I dot Scarry Reid's eyes.)
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To: KantianBurke
"16.3 percent of the federal budget went to anti-poverty efforts"

Should read "16.3 per cent of taxpayers' appropriated funds were handed out for votes, in the standard wealth-redistribution social engineering scheme that has failed miserably since the New Deal and The Great Society began it.....

7 posted on 07/23/2006 4:22:47 PM PDT by traditional1
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To: neverdem

shows that we have a very moderate/rino president.


8 posted on 07/23/2006 8:25:00 PM PDT by OregonRepublican (Jesus Loves you Allah wants you dead! Liberalism is a mental Disorder- Savage)
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To: neverdem

The wealth of this Nation is amazing. From all the data/info around it seems that the gov. could give EVERY person over age 21 30-40,000 bucks a year and save billin$ and billion$ and Billion$ and billion$ and billion$ and billion$,,,,,,,,,(so close to the truth it's scary)


9 posted on 07/24/2006 3:44:38 AM PDT by Waco
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To: neverdem
Among the 33 distinct programs Riedl analyzed, two were eliminated (the Food Donations Program and Low Rent Public Housing Loans and Expenses). Seven others were reduced. The other 24 all increased. And how! Refugee & Entrant Assistance: Up 11 percent between 2001 and 2005. Homeless Assistance Grants: Up 33 percent. Food Stamps: Up 71 percent. Child Tax Credit Payments (from $982 million to $14.6 billion): Up 1,389 percent.

And then Bush will say we need illegals to do the work Americans won't. But with this kind of swag being thrown at Americans who won't work, why would they? It would be a pay cut.

10 posted on 07/24/2006 3:48:55 AM PDT by dirtboy (Glad to see the ink was still working in Bush's veto pen, now that he wisely used it on this bill)
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